Title: Seeker/Sensor Technology Assessment for ECAP
1Seeker/Sensor Technology Assessment for ECAP
2Seeker/Sensor Technology AssessmsntHuntsville,
Alabama January 16, 2004
- Tim Carroll
- AMCOM
- tjcarroll_at_knology.net
3Seeker/Sensor Technology Assessment
- Outline
- Definitions
- Background Information
- Seeker Types
- Radar Seekers
- Electro-Optical Seekers
- Laser Seekers
4Definition of a Seeker
- Definition - The seeker is the eye of a missile.
Its job is to acquire and track the target until
the missile impacts the target. The seeker
provides bore-sight error signals (position of
the target relative to the center axis of the
missile) to the guidance algorithms. This energy
is usually electromagnetic (EM) but can be other
forms of energy as well (i.e., acoustic). - Seeker Block Diagram
Target
To Guidance Computer
Electrical Processor
Gimbal Platform
Receiver/Detector
Transmitter
Aperture (Antenna or Optics)
5Seeker Field-of-View and Field-of-Regard
- Field-of-View The angular area in space at
which the seeker can observe at any given time
(the FoV for radar seekers if referred to as
Beam Width). - Field-of-Regard The total angular area that a
seeker can view by slewing the seeker aperture up
and down and left to right on gimbals. Some
missile seekers have no slewing mechanism and are
called strap-down seekers (then the FoV and FoR
are the equal).
6Seeker/Sensor Discipline Interaction
Operational Engagement Requirements Engagement
Time Lines Coverage Area
Aerodynamics Nose Shape
Guidance Scheme Seeker Type (Active or Passive)
System Simulation FoV Detection Range
Size Constraints Diameter Length
Seeker/Sensor Design
Mechanical Design and Layout Size Weight
Target Type Wavelength Power Requirements
Cost Constraints Strap-Down vs.
Gimballed Multi-Mode
Electrical System Power Requirements Voltage Curre
nt
Logistics Considerations Packaging and Handling
7Electromagnetic Waves
- An electromagnetic disturbance that is composed
of time-varying electric and magnetic fields and
can transport energy through space, even if no
matter is present in that space, is called an
electromagnetic wave (abbreviated EM). - EM waves propagate at the speed of light.
- The electric and magnetic waves in an EM wave are
oriented at 90 degrees to each other and to the
direction of propagation. - EM waves travel in straight lines.
- Objects in temperature above absolute zero emit
EM waves in the Infrared (IR) spectrum.
Direction of Propagation
8EM Wavelengths and Frequencies
- EM frequencies and wavelengths are related by the
following expression
where l wavelength, c speed of light (3x108
meters/sec), and f frequency of oscillation.
9EM Atmospheric Attenuation
10Classification of Seekers/SensorsSpectral Band
- Seekers are catagorized by which spectral band of
EM radiation they operate within - Microwave
- MMW
- E-O (Visual and IR)
- Laser (CO2 10.6mm, YAG 1.06mm, GaAs 0.9mm)
Band Frequency Wavelength
L 1,000 2,000 MHz. 30 15 cm
S 2,000 4,000 MHz. 15 7.5 cm
C 4,000 8,000 MHz. 7.5 3.75 cm
X 8,000 12,500 MHz. 3.75 2.4 cm
Ku 12.5 18 GHz. 2.4 1.67 cm
K 18 26.5 GHz. 1.67 1.13 cm
Ka 26.5 40 GHz. 1.13 0.75 cm
MMW gt 30 GHz. lt 1.0 cm
Visible 0.38 0.76 mm
Middle IR 3 8 mm
Long IR 8 14 mm
11Classification of Seekers/SensorsActive/Passive/S
emi-Active
- Active seekers transmit energy and the receive
the reflected energy. Examples are Microwave
Radars, Millimeter Wave Radars, and Laser Radars
(LADAR). - Passive seekers look for natural occurring EM
radiation (Infrared) or reflected EM radiation
(Visual). - Semi-Active Seekers operate in one of two modes
- Other asset illuminates target while missile
seeker operates in a passive mode to detect
reflect EM radiation. - Missile is guided to target by other asset and
then the missile seeker becomes active near the
target. This is also called Terminal Active
12Classification of Seekers/SensorsStabilization
Mechanization
- Stabilized Seeker Head
- Seeker Head is isolated from the missile body
motion through gimbals, servo motors, and rate
sensors. A clear stabilized image/signal is
presented to the seeker detectors. - Increase cost,complexity, size and weight
- Strap-Down Seeker
- Seeker is rigidly attached to the missile body
and observes the same motion as the missile - Cheaper, lower quality image/signal, smaller
Field of Regard - Limited engagement geometries
13Microwave Radar Seekers/Sensors
- Advantages
- All Weather
- Range and Range Rate Information
- Long Operating Ranges
- Low degradation due to battlefield obsurants
- Doppler detection for moving targets
- Low drag nose shapes
- Disadvantages
- Large Components
- Large Aperature
- Active Mode
- Large Angular Resolution
- High Cost
- State of the Art
- Phased Array Radars
- Doppler Beam Sharpening
- Synthetic Aperture Radar
- Radiometric
- Multisensor/Sensor Fusion
Microwave Radars are best suited for large
missiles or ground based systems
14Millimeter Wave Seekers/Sensors
- Advantages
- All Weather with some degradation
- Range and Range Rate Information
- Small Components
- Small Angular Resolution
- Doppler detection for moving targets
- Low drag nose shapes
- Disadvantages
- Active Mode
- High Cost
- Relatively Short Operating Ranges
- State of the Art
- Small Components
- Doppler Beam Sharpening
- Strapdown Configurations
- Radiometric
- Multisensor/Sensor Fusion
MMW Wave Radars are suited well for small
missiles and short detection ranges
15IR Seekers/Sensors
- Advantages
- Small Components
- Small Aperture
- Very Small Angular Resolution
- Passive Mode
- Small Miss Distances
- Aim-point Bias Capability
- Disadvantages
- Weather Degradation - Moderate
- Battlefield Obscurant Degradation - Moderate
- No Range or Range Rate Information
- High Cost
- High Drag Nose Shapes Required
- State of the Art
- Focal Plane Array
- Uncooled IR Sensors
- Strapdown Configurations
- Multisensor/Sensor Fusion
IR Seekers are suited well for small missiles and
short detection ranges that require precise hit
locations
16Visual Seekers/Sensors
- Advantages
- Small Components
- Small Aperture
- Very Small Angular Resolution
- Passive Mode
- Small Miss Distances
- Aim-point Bias Capability
- Disadvantages
- Weather Degradation - High
- Battlefield Obscurant Degradation - High
- No Range or Range Rate Information
- High Cost
- High Drag Nose Shapes Required
- Cannot Operate at Night
- State of the Art
- Strapdown Configurations
- Multisensor/Sensor Fusion
Visual Seekers are not in use much anymore due to
the lack of night vision and lack of capability
in obscured environments
17Laser Seekers/Sensors
- Advantages
- Small Components
- Small Aperture
- Range and Range Rate Information
- Small Miss Distances
- Aim-point Bias Capability
- Disadvantages
- Weather Degradation - High
- Battlefield Obscurant Degradation - High
- Dependency on Designator (Semi-Active)
- High Cost
- No Fire-and-Forget Capability
- Small Search Areas
- State of the Art
- LADAR
- Side-Looking Beamriders
- Multisensor/Sensor Fusion
Laser Seekers are used in semi-active missiles
where designating assets are available
18Sample Calculations
Snapshot from MS Excel utility used
in Seeker/Sensor Design.